Janath Manohararaj, BlueCross BlueShield, at HP Big Data Conference 2014 with John Furrier and Dave Vellante
@theCUBE
#HPBigData2014
Is there going to be a war on database formats, and will the worlds of Hadoop and Big Data combine or collide in the enterprise? These questions were raised just before Janath Manohararaj took the stage at SiliconANGLE’s roving news desk theCUBE, as the Team Lead of Database Services with Blue Cross and Blue Shield Assoc. spoke behind the scenes with theCUBE co-hosts John Furrier and Dave Vellante. These hot-button topics were intriguing enough to spill into Manohararaj’s segment, kicking off his live interview from the HP Vertica Conference.
Speaking on databases and delving into the Hadoop landscape, Manohararaj reminded viewers that in the beginning there were relational databases, and Big Data was so new it remained a distinct faction of the market. As far as Blue Cross Blue Shield was concerned, the health insurance provider never saw a risk of database collision with Big Data. Quite the contrary, it anticipated that things were all converging for the purposes of data management.
Vellante wanted to find out how this company has historically been using data. Manohararaj mentioned that the old way of dealing with data implied that each project would have its own data warehouse, with the cost of ownership being very high because data was replicated. In contrast, Hadoop makes things easier, bringing costs down and improving performance.
Recalling the “a-ha!” moment when his company realised the potential of Hadoop, Manohararaj admitted that initially Blue Cross Blue Shield had pre-database configuration, introducing Vertica into their system around 2008. Manohararaj’s team immediately noticed a performance boost, improving 10x faster than before.
“The first step was moving from traditional DBMS to columnar base. Now we are thinking about creating a data lake, one unified repository” admitted Manohararaj.
Balancing compliance with innovation
Regarding the healthcare sector, Furrier wanted to find out more about the way Blue Cross Blue Shield is balancing the demands of industry compliance with the need for innovation.
“With healthcare, explained Manohararaj, “the information needs to be instantaneous, which used to be a problem before. Vertica is one of the best databases that we work with.”
“Vertica is the Ferrari of the industry,” agreed Furrier, prodding Manohararaj to explain what makes Vertica so successful. Manohararaj listed three key factors:
performance
low costs
really good support (proactive, vs calls and call backs)
Open source vs. vendor distribution
A final topic discussed during Manohararaj’s interview looked at the emerging processes commercializing Big Data for the enterprise, where a collision of another sort is happening.
“Are you using a vendor distribution or open source Apache Hadoop?” asked Vellante, curious about the enterprise implications underlying the two opposing methods of selling Big Data solutions. Manohararaj disclosed that it is a work in progress and that they are moving towards open source: “The open source has always been a challenge, there are always steep learning curves and you need training. With proprietary solutions, it’s much easier.”
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Janath Manohararaj | HP Big Data Conference 2014
Janath Manohararaj, BlueCross BlueShield, at HP Big Data Conference 2014 with John Furrier and Dave Vellante
@theCUBE
#HPBigData2014
Is there going to be a war on database formats, and will the worlds of Hadoop and Big Data combine or collide in the enterprise? These questions were raised just before Janath Manohararaj took the stage at SiliconANGLE’s roving news desk theCUBE, as the Team Lead of Database Services with Blue Cross and Blue Shield Assoc. spoke behind the scenes with theCUBE co-hosts John Furrier and Dave Vellante. These hot-button topics were intriguing enough to spill into Manohararaj’s segment, kicking off his live interview from the HP Vertica Conference.
Speaking on databases and delving into the Hadoop landscape, Manohararaj reminded viewers that in the beginning there were relational databases, and Big Data was so new it remained a distinct faction of the market. As far as Blue Cross Blue Shield was concerned, the health insurance provider never saw a risk of database collision with Big Data. Quite the contrary, it anticipated that things were all converging for the purposes of data management.
Vellante wanted to find out how this company has historically been using data. Manohararaj mentioned that the old way of dealing with data implied that each project would have its own data warehouse, with the cost of ownership being very high because data was replicated. In contrast, Hadoop makes things easier, bringing costs down and improving performance.
Recalling the “a-ha!” moment when his company realised the potential of Hadoop, Manohararaj admitted that initially Blue Cross Blue Shield had pre-database configuration, introducing Vertica into their system around 2008. Manohararaj’s team immediately noticed a performance boost, improving 10x faster than before.
“The first step was moving from traditional DBMS to columnar base. Now we are thinking about creating a data lake, one unified repository” admitted Manohararaj.
Balancing compliance with innovation
Regarding the healthcare sector, Furrier wanted to find out more about the way Blue Cross Blue Shield is balancing the demands of industry compliance with the need for innovation.
“With healthcare, explained Manohararaj, “the information needs to be instantaneous, which used to be a problem before. Vertica is one of the best databases that we work with.”
“Vertica is the Ferrari of the industry,” agreed Furrier, prodding Manohararaj to explain what makes Vertica so successful. Manohararaj listed three key factors:
performance
low costs
really good support (proactive, vs calls and call backs)
Open source vs. vendor distribution
A final topic discussed during Manohararaj’s interview looked at the emerging processes commercializing Big Data for the enterprise, where a collision of another sort is happening.
“Are you using a vendor distribution or open source Apache Hadoop?” asked Vellante, curious about the enterprise implications underlying the two opposing methods of selling Big Data solutions. Manohararaj disclosed that it is a work in progress and that they are moving towards open source: “The open source has always been a challenge, there are always steep learning curves and you need training. With proprietary solutions, it’s much easier.”